What is moisture content in VCO
Moisture content refers to the amount of water present in the oil. In virgin coconut oil, this value is typically very low and measured as a percentage.
Even small amounts of water can affect the oil’s stability and handling.
Why moisture content matters
Stability
- Lower moisture improves stability
- Reduces risk of degradation
- Supports longer storage
Shelf Life
- Low moisture extends shelf life
- Prevents spoilage
- Maintains product quality
Microbial Risk
- Water allows microbial growth
- Low moisture reduces contamination risk
- Important for food and cosmetics
Product Consistency
- Ensures stable product behavior
- Important for manufacturing
- Supports repeatability
Typical moisture levels in VCO
In most commercial specifications:
- High quality VCO: ≤ 0.1%
- Acceptable range: up to 0.2%
Values above this range may indicate incomplete processing or poor drying.
What causes high moisture content
- Incomplete separation of water during processing
- Improper drying or centrifugation
- Condensation during storage
- Exposure to humid environments
Proper processing and storage are key to maintaining low moisture.
How buyers evaluate moisture content
Moisture is one of the first values buyers check on a COA.
- Used together with FFA and peroxide value
- Important for long-distance export
- Critical for food and cosmetic applications
Consistently low moisture is often seen as a sign of good processing control.
Simple explanation
Think of moisture like unwanted water in the oil:
- Less water = more stable oil
- More water = higher risk of spoilage
Simple takeaway
- Moisture shows how much water is in the oil
- Lower moisture = better quality
- Typical VCO is ≤ 0.2%
- Important for shelf life and safety
- Consistency is key for buyers